Bilby (Macrotis lagotis), also called greater bilby, dalgyte, or greater rabbit-eared bandicoot, small, burrowing, nocturnal, long-eared marsupial belonging to the family Thylacomyidae (order Peramelemorphia) and native to Australia. Prior to the arrival of Europeans, bilbies occupied habitats across more than 70 percent of Australia. At present, however, they are restricted to the Great Sandy, Tanami, and Gibson deserts in northwestern Australia and a small pocket of southwestern Queensland. Bilbies are closely related to bandicoots, which are classified in the family Peramelidae.

Physical features

The bilby is known for its long snout, blue-gray fur, white underbelly, and long, hairless ears that resemble those of rabbits. On its tail is a prominent band of black fur that terminates with a white tuft that surrounds a naked, spurlike tip. The species is sexually dimorphic, males being nearly twice as large as females; the largest males grow to 55 cm (about 22 inches) in length and weigh approximately 2.5 kg (about 5.5 pounds). The ends of the forelimbs terminate in five digits with the middle three digits possessing a claw. The hind limbs are similar in structure to those of kangaroos; however, instead of hopping, bilbies lope in a manner similar to that of hares. The opening to the marsupium (pouch) in females faces backward (that is, the pouch opening is located lower on the abdomen than the pouch itself) to prevent material excavated by burrowing activities from entering the cavity.

Bilbies are solitary animals, and members of both sexes construct several burrows within their home range as hiding spots from daytime heat or from predators. These burrows also serve as nurseries for young.

Bilby (Macrotis lagotis) with a small mouselike animal at Wild Life Sydney Zoo, Sydney, …

Dcoetzee

Bilbies are capable of breeding year-round and have one of the shortest mammalian gestation periods; females may have up to four litters within a single year. Approximately 12–14 days after breeding, females give birth to one or two (occasionally three or four) offspring, or joeys, who subsequently climb into the mother’s marsupium. The joeys complete their development over the next 75–80 days inside the pouch, where they suckle milk from their mother. After they leave the pouch, they remain in their mother’s burrow for approximately 14 days and then finally either leave to live on their own or are forcibly expelled by their mother. Female bilbies are capable of reproducing at five months of age, and males become sexually mature at eight months.

Bilby longevity in the wild is a matter of some debate. In captivity, however, bilbies may live up to 11 years, but most live only six to seven years.

Conservation status

Since the 1800s, habitat loss from land-use conversion and increased predation and competition stemming from species invasions have caused bilby populations to decline. (These forces also caused the extinction of the only other known species in the genus Macrotis—M. leucura, a smaller form commonly called the lesser bilby—sometime between 1931 and 1960.) Between 1982 and 1994 the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) classified the bilby as an endangered species on its Red List of Threatened Species. Since 1994, however, the IUCN has upgraded the animal’s status to vulnerable. Although reintroduction programs designed to create sustainable bilby populations in other parts of Australia have been established in New South Wales and Southern Australia, as well as several parts of Western Australia and Queensland, possibly fewer than 10,000 bilbies remain in the wild.

The bilby and the European rabbit (Oryctolagus cuniculus), an invasive species that has become an agricultural pest in Australia, are known to compete with one another for food. In 1991 members of the organization Foundation for Rabbit-Free Australia Inc. started a campaign to replace the “Easter bunny” in Australia with the “Easter bilby” to raise public awareness of bilby conservation while also educating the Australian public about the ecological damage caused by introduced rabbits.

Learn More in these related articles:

...be black-barred, is the common form in eastern Australia. The three species of short-nosed bandicoots, Isoodon (incorrectly Thylacis), are found in New Guinea, Australia, and Tasmania. Rabbit-eared bandicoots, or bilbies, are species of Thylacomys (sometimes Macrotis); now endangered, they are found only in remote colonies in arid interior Australia. As the name...

locomotion of a type found in both terrestrial and aquatic animal groups. Some fossorial animals dig short permanent burrows in which they live; others tunnel extensively and nearly continuously. In relatively soft substrates, such as soil, burrowers tend to be limbless (lizards, snakes) or...

any of more than 250 species belonging to the infraclass Metatheria (sometimes called Marsupialia), a mammalian group characterized by premature birth and continued development of the newborn while attached to the nipples on the mother’s lower belly. The pouch—or marsupium, from which...

Britannica Web sites

The bilby is a small, burrowing animal that lives only in Australia. Bilbies belong to a group of animals called marsupials. A marsupial is an animal that carries its young in a pouch. The scientific name of the bilby is Macrotis lagotis.

The bilby is a small, burrowing marsupial with long ears that is native to Australia. It is also known as the greater bilby, the dalgyte, or the greater rabbit-eared bandicoot. The bilby belongs to the family Thylacomyidae (order Peramelemorphia). Its scientific name is Macrotis lagotis.